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Hospital
Inpatient Prospective Payment System Final Rule Increases Payments to
Treat COVID-19 and Improves Quality of Data Collection
The Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Service (CMS) is taking action to drive
value-based, person-centered care, and promote sustainability and
readiness to respond to future public health emergencies in our
nation’s hospitals through the Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment
System (IPPS)/ Long Term Care Hospital (LTCH) Prospective Payment
System final rule released today.
The final
rule, effective October 1, 2021, authorizes additional payments for
diagnostics and therapies to treat COVID-19 during the current public
health emergency (PHE), and beyond. The rule revises payment policies,
as well as policies under certain quality and value-based purchasing
programs for hospitals, to lessen the adverse impacts of the pandemic.
Some of these changes will incentivize the meaningful use of certified
electronic health record (EHR) technology that will help public health
officials monitor for future unplanned events.
“How
Medicare pays for hospital care and evaluates quality, are integral
pieces of achieving and addressing gaps in health equity and
strengthening our health care system for a more sustainable future. CMS
is moving forward to incorporate what we have learned from the COVID-19
pandemic in order to improve quality and increase transparency so that
patients are positioned to make informed decisions about their care,”
said CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure. “With this final rule,
we are further improving how we measure and evaluate data while
investing in quality care for people that rely on Medicare for
coverage.”
Last week,
CMS also finalized a number of other Medicare payment rules including
for Skilled Nursing Facilities, Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities, Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities, and Hospice providers. Using lessons
learned from the COVID-19 pandemic, these final rules will enact
policies that will further protect and deliver better care to Medicare
beneficiaries. These payment rules finalized new quality measures to
give beneficiaries and their families better insights into the quality
of care rendered at hospice facilities and vaccination reporting of
facility staff.
Improving Health Equity
In an
effort to advance equity through the quality reporting measurement, CMS
solicited feedback on opportunities to leverage diverse data sets such
as race, ethnicity, Medicare/Medicaid dual eligible status, disability
status, LGBTQ+, and socioeconomic status. The agency received more than
200 comments, reflecting the importance stakeholders place on this
Biden-Harris Administration priority. CMS will consider the feedback it
received to inform future actions.
“Standardization
of equity data to improve hospital data collection is just one more way
CMS will lead the national conversation on improving health equity,”
said Brooks-LaSure. “CMS will use these comments and innovate on
quality measures to help identify health equity data. We’re also
measuring hospital initiatives to improve maternal health outcomes as
we work to reduce disparities in maternal morbidity.”
Addressing
the maternal health crisis and improving maternal health is a priority
to advance health equity, and a quality improvement goal for CMS. To
that end, CMS is adding a Maternal Morbidity measure to the hospital
quality reporting program that would require hospitals to report
whether they participate in statewide or national efforts to improve
perinatal health, known as Quality Improvement (QI) initiatives. Many
of the factors contributing to maternal morbidity are preventable, and
differentially impact women of color. This measure is an important
initial step toward implementation of patient safety practices to
reduce maternal morbidity, and in turn, maternal mortality.
CMS is also
adopting a measure that requires hospitals and long-term care hospitals
to report COVID-19 vaccination rates of workers in their facilities.
Having access to information about COVID-19 vaccination rates among
health care personnel will help patients, caregivers, and their
communities, make informed decisions when seeking care from hospitals,
cancer centers and long-term care hospitals.
Ensuring Access to Life-Saving Diagnostics and Therapeutics
In November
2020, CMS established the New COVID-19 Treatments Add-on Payment
(NCTAP) to encourage hospitals to provide new COVID-19 treatments during
the PHE. CMS is finalizing its proposal to extend the NCTAP for certain
eligible technologies through the end of the fiscal year in which the
PHE ends to continue to encourage these new treatments, and to minimize
any potential payment disruption immediately following the end of the
PHE. These products include currently approved hospital treatments.
Providing these therapies to COVID-19 patients early can help reduce
hospital stays and deaths.
Sustaining Hospital Readiness to Respond to Future Public Health
Threats
Strengthening
public health functions through methods such as early warning
surveillance, case surveillance, and vaccine uptake, increases
information available to the public and helps hospitals better serve
their patients. CMS continues its ongoing response to the PHE and
future health threats by promoting the meaningful use of certified EHR
IT to report data that supports public health efforts. Specifically,
CMS is modifying the Promoting Interoperability Program for eligible
hospitals and critical access hospitals to expand required reporting
within the Public Health and Clinical Data Exchange Objective.
The final
rule requires hospitals to attest they are in active engagement with
public health agency to submit data for measures related to nationwide
surveillance for early warning of emerging outbreaks and threats;
automated case and laboratory reporting for rapid public health
response; and visibility on immunization coverage so public health
agencies can tailor vaccine distribution strategies. Hospital reporting
of the measures will support public health agencies as they prepare to
respond to both future health threats and long-term COVID-19
recovery.
For a link
to the FY2022 IPPS/LTCH PPS Final Rule fact sheet, please visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/fiscal-year-fy-2022-medicare-hospital-inpatient-prospective-payment-system-ipps-and-long-term-care-0.
For a link
to the FY2022 IPPS/LTCH PPS Final Rule on the Federal Register, please
visit: https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection/current.
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